A US team has found changes in the blood of a child with organophosphate (OP) poisoning, which could make it easier for other patients to prove exposure to similar poisons.
Until now, doctors have told people suffering from similar conditions that their symptoms were all in their heads.
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[ MEMORIAL TO VICTIMS ]
To: Lyndon Hawkins <hawkins@empm.cdpr.ca.gov>
Senior Research
Scientist
State of California,
Department of Pesticide Regulation - Integrated Pest Management
Dear Lyndon, I thought you might like to
check out the BBC News | SCI/TECH | Nerve poison (Dursban) leaves telltale
evidence - if so click or read below: <http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_708000/708379.stm">
Hundreds of sheep farmers believe they have suffered
OP poisoning
Tuesday, 18 April, 2000, 09:01 GMT 10:01 UK -
Nerve poison leaves telltale evidence. Hundreds
of sheep farmers believe they have suffered OP poisoning - By environment
correspondent Alex Kirby.
A US team has found changes in the blood of a
child with organophosphate (OP) poisoning, which could make it easier for other
patients to prove exposure to similar poisons.
The changes, a series of antibodies, provide
physical evidence of the neurological damage caused
by the poison.
This is thought to be the first physical evidence discovered of the neurological damage many believe is caused by OP exposure and related conditions, like Gulf War Syndrome.
The researchers say the antibodies' discovery
"may provide a useful marker for diagnosis of chemically-induced neurological disorders, and may help in the
development of appropriate treatment".
The research team, whose work is reported in
the journal Environmental Epidemiology and Toxicology,
was led by Professor Mohamed Abou-Donia, of Duke University Medical Center,
Durham, North Carolina.
Not imaginary
Professor Abou-Donia told BBC News
Online: "This is a potentially very significant discovery. Until now,
doctors have told people suffering from similar conditions that their symptoms
were all in their heads."
"We've shown that a bio-marker exists,
and it could help a range of patients to persuade their
doctors of the reality of what they're suffering."
The patient he and his team examined was a
five-year-old boy who had been exposed to tar
and to an OP insecticide, chlorpyrifos, when he was a year old.
The tar had been shallowly buried in earth
where the boy played, and the insecticide had been
used several times inside his home.
By the time he was 14 months old, two months
after his exposure, his family thought he was unsteady
on his feet, and his speech, which had been normal, was deteriorating.
He was also irritable. At 17 months he was
unable to walk without falling. By 26 months, however,
there was some improvement in his speech, and his irritability had lessened.
His neurological problems were judged to be
consistent with OP ester-induced delayed neurotoxicity
(OPIDN).
Blood samples
Five years after his exposure, when he was
seven years old, the boy's intellect was defined
as lower than his family's, and he was placed in a special school because of
"a mild degree of mental
retardation".
The researchers tested his blood for the
presence of antibodies against three proteins characteristic
of neurodegenerative disorders.
They used blood samples from the boy's 6- and
9-year-old brothers, his 32-year-old father and 34-year-old mother as controls.
Antibodies against two of the proteins were found in the boy's blood, and in
that of several of the controls. No antibodies against the third were found in
any of the samples.
The researchers say: "In healthy
individuals, the presence of autoantibodies against [these] proteins is
age-dependent: they increase with age. In the present study, more of the
antibodies were detected in the mother's serum than in any of the other
controls."
But it was the boy himself who showed by far the highest levels.
Elizabeth Sigmund, of the OP Information
Network, told BBC News Online: "This is a wonderful
breakthrough.
"We have 800 people on our database,
mainly sheep farmers who have been exposed to OPs while dipping their animals.
"This news is vitally important for them,
and for veterans from the Gulf.
"They're chronically ill, and for years they've been struggling to prove the cause of their condition to their doctors.
"Now it looks as though they'll be able
to do that."
Well Lyndon, hopefully the victims of Your
"registered" POISONS will start a class action and sue all of those
who are responsible for POISONING them. Have
you ever wondered why the numbers of our "special education" students
are always increasing and why there is so much violence in our schools and
streets - now science is looking at
your "registered" POISONS! When
will it be "legal" (in your opinion) to use safe and far more
effective alternatives to actually control pest problems in California?
Respectfully, Stephen L. Tvedten
Please!
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